I don't take Kant's hard and fast view that an action is itself immoral without consideration of the motivation behind that action, or its consequences.
Does living until 90 rather than 30 devalue life?
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on June 05, 2015, 05:57:24 PMI don't take Kant's hard and fast view that an action is itself immoral without consideration of the motivation behind that action, or its consequences.Thank God. Kantian ethics make me want to tear my hair out.
Well I respect his work and think he's got interesting and compelling arguments, but it seems impossible to apply.
Of course this is all presupposing that it is better to exist than to not, which I don't think is entirely valid.
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on June 05, 2015, 06:03:00 PMWell I respect his work and think he's got interesting and compelling arguments, but it seems impossible to apply.It just looks insane on the face of it, to me. Like his metaphysics. There's no such thing as an action in itself; all actions are just a collection of motivations and consequences. It makes zero sense to not judge actions by those metrics. A categorical imperative would only make sense if it were consequentially tolerable.
I think there's a strong argument for an action being universally immoral because it inherently leverages a person as a means to an end, or usurps their consent or autonomy.
Quote from: Verbatim on June 05, 2015, 12:28:58 PMIf there was an afterlife, that would change everything.How so? Or, I mean, from your point of view, what exactly would be so monumental about it?
If there was an afterlife, that would change everything.
Interesting question. Every religion/belief/whatever tends to have the proclamation of an afterlife. Something cheery that you stop buy to after you kick the bucket.So, what's your take on it?If you're a particularliy devout follower, would the concept of "eternity, sunshine and bunnies" de value how much effort or how much worth you put in being alive?I bring this up in light of one of those sects of people that let their kids die if they need a blood transfusion. No blood, their good book says.Any ideas on how much this affects people and to what degree?
Quote from: HurtfulTurkey on June 05, 2015, 04:53:10 PMDoes living until 90 rather than 30 devalue life? Yes. According to my calculations, the average life has lost 50.8pc of its value upon its 63rd birthday. Which is why I support mandatory abortions of people on their 63rd birthday.
Quote from: Meta Cognition on June 05, 2015, 12:20:27 PMYup. Econ 101: scarcity = value.then how come nobody wants to pay $$$$$ for my rare pepe
Yup. Econ 101: scarcity = value.